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Spinal injury: assessment and initial Spinal injury: assessment and initial management management NICE guideline Published: 17 February 2016 nice.org.uk/guidance/ng41 © NICE 2016. All rights reserved.

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Spinal injury: assessment and initialSpinal injury: assessment and initialmanagementmanagement

NICE guideline

Published: 17 February 2016nice.org.uk/guidance/ng41

© NICE 2016. All rights reserved.

YYour responsibilityour responsibility

The recommendations in this guideline represent the view of NICE, arrived at after careful

consideration of the evidence available. When exercising their judgement, professionals are

expected to take this guideline fully into account, alongside the individual needs, preferences and

values of their patients or service users. The application of the recommendations in this guideline

are not mandatory and the guideline does not override the responsibility of healthcare

professionals to make decisions appropriate to the circumstances of the individual patient, in

consultation with the patient and/or their carer or guardian.

Local commissioners and/or providers have a responsibility to enable the guideline to be applied

when individual health professionals and their patients or service users wish to use it. They should

do so in the context of local and national priorities for funding and developing services, and in light

of their duties to have due regard to the need to eliminate unlawful discrimination, to advance

equality of opportunity and to reduce health inequalities. Nothing in this guideline should be

interpreted in a way that would be inconsistent with compliance with those duties.

Spinal injury: assessment and initial management (NG41)

© NICE 2016. All rights reserved. Page 2 of 23

ContentsContents

Recommendations ............................................................................................................................................................. 4

1.1 Assessment and management in pre-hospital settings ........................................................................................... 4

1.2 Pain management in pre-hospital and hospital settings .......................................................................................... 9

1.3 Immediate destination after injury................................................................................................................................... 10

1.4 Emergency department assessment and management .......................................................................................... 11

1.5 Diagnostic imaging.................................................................................................................................................................. 12

1.6 Communication with tertiary services............................................................................................................................ 14

1.7 Early management in the emergency department after traumatic spinal cord injury ................................ 14

1.8 Information and support for patients, family members and carers..................................................................... 15

1.9 Documentation in pre-hospital and hospital settings............................................................................................... 17

1.10 Training and skills ................................................................................................................................................................. 20

Context................................................................................................................................................................................... 21

More information............................................................................................................................................................................ 21

Recommendations for research .................................................................................................................................. 22

1 Neuropathic pain relief ............................................................................................................................................................. 22

2 Cervical spine dislocation ........................................................................................................................................................ 22

3 Thoracic and lumbosacral assessment tool....................................................................................................................... 22

Spinal injury: assessment and initial management (NG41)

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RecommendationsRecommendations

People have the right to be involved in discussions and make informed decisions about their

care, as described in your care.

Making decisions using NICE guidelines explains how we use words to show the strength (or

certainty) of our recommendations, and has information about prescribing medicines

(including off-label use), professional guidelines, standards and laws (including on consent and

mental capacity), and safeguarding.

Recommendations apply to both children (under 16s) and adults (16 or over) unless otherwise

specified.

1.1 Assessment and management in pre-hospital settings

Assessment for spinal injuryAssessment for spinal injury

1.1.1 On arrival at the scene of the incident, use a prioritising sequence to assess

people with suspected trauma, for example <C>ABCDE:

catastrophic haemorrhage

airway with in-line spinal immobilisation (for guidance on airway management refer to

the NICE guideline on major trauma)

breathing

circulation

disability (neurological)

exposure and environment.

1.1.2 At all stages of the assessment:

protect the person's cervical spine with manual in-line spinal immobilisation,

particularly during any airway intervention andand

avoid moving the remainder of the spine.

1.1.3 Assess the person for spinal injury, initially taking into account the factors listed

below. Check if the person:

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has any significant distracting injuries

is under the influence of drugs or alcohol

is confused or uncooperative

has a reduced level of consciousness

has any spinal pain

has any hand or foot weakness (motor assessment)

has altered or absent sensation in the hands or feet (sensory assessment)

has priapism (unconscious or exposed male)

has a history of past spinal problems, including previous spinal surgery or conditions

that predispose to instability of the spine.

1.1.4 Carry out full in-line spinal immobilisation if any of the factors in

recommendation 1.1.3 are present or if this assessment cannot be done.

Assessment for cervical spine injuryAssessment for cervical spine injury

1.1.5 Assess whether the person is at high, low or no risk for cervical spine injury

using the Canadian C-spine rule as follows:

the person is at high risk if they have at least one of the following high-risk factors:

age 65 years or older

dangerous mechanism of injury (fall from a height of greater than 1 metre or

5 steps, axial load to the head – for example diving, high-speed motor vehicle

collision, rollover motor accident, ejection from a motor vehicle, accident

involving motorised recreational vehicles, bicycle collision, horse riding

accidents)

paraesthesia in the upper or lower limbs

the person is at low risk if they have at least one of the following low-risk factors:

involved in a minor rear-end motor vehicle collision

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comfortable in a sitting position

ambulatory at any time since the injury

no midline cervical spine tenderness

delayed onset of neck pain

the person remains at low risk if they are:

unable to actively rotate their neck 45 degrees to the left and right (the range of

the neck can only be assessed safely if the person is at low risk and there are no

high-risk factors).

the person has no risk if they:

have one of the above low-risk factors andand

are able to actively rotate their neck 45 degrees to the left and right.

1.1.6 Be aware that applying the Canadian C-spine rule to children is difficult and the

child's developmental stage should be taken into account.

Assessment for thorAssessment for thoracic or lumbosacracic or lumbosacral spine injuryal spine injury

1.1.7 Assess the person with suspected thoracic or lumbosacral spine injury using

these factors:

age 65 years or older and reported pain in the thoracic or lumbosacral spine

dangerous mechanism of injury (fall from a height of greater than 3 metres, axial load

to the head or base of the spine – for example falls landing on feet or buttocks,

high-speed motor vehicle collision, rollover motor accident, lap belt restraint only,

ejection from a motor vehicle, accident involving motorised recreational vehicles,

bicycle collision, horse riding accidents)

pre-existing spinal pathology, or known or at risk of osteoporosis – for example steroid

use

suspected spinal fracture in another region of the spine

abnormal neurological symptoms (paraesthesia or weakness or numbness)

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on examination:

abnormal neurological signs (motor or sensory deficit)

new deformity or bony midline tenderness (on palpation)

bony midline tenderness (on percussion)

midline or spinal pain (on coughing)

on mobilisation (sit, stand, step, assess walking): pain or abnormal neurological

symptoms (stop if this occurs).

1.1.8 Be aware that assessing children with suspected thoracic or lumbosacral spine

injury is difficult and the child's developmental stage should be taken into

account.

When to carry out or maintain full in-line spinal immobilisationWhen to carry out or maintain full in-line spinal immobilisation

1.1.9 Carry out or maintain full in-line spinal immobilisation if:

a high-risk factor for cervical spine injury is identified and indicated by the Canadian

C-spine rule

a low-risk factor for cervical spine injury is identified and indicated by the Canadian

C-spine rule and the person is unable to actively rotate their neck 45 degrees left and

right

indicated by one or more of the factors listed in recommendation 1.1.7.

1.1.10 Do not carry out or maintain full in-line spinal immobilisation in people if:

they have low-risk factors for cervical spine injury as identified and indicated by the

Canadian C-spine rule, are pain free and are able to actively rotate their neck

45 degrees left and right

they do not have any of the factors listed in recommendation 1.1.7.

How to carry out full in-line spinal immobilisationHow to carry out full in-line spinal immobilisation

1.1.11 When immobilising the spine tailor the approach to the person's specific

circumstances (see recommendations 1.1.12 and 1.1.16 to 1.1.18).

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1.1.12 The use of spinal immobilisation devices may be difficult (for example in people

with short or wide necks, or people with a pre-existing deformity) and could be

counterproductive (for example increasing pain, worsening neurological signs

and symptoms). In uncooperative, agitated or distressed people, including

children, think about letting them find a position where they are comfortable

with manual in-line spinal immobilisation.

1.1.13 When carrying out full in-line spinal immobilisation in adults, manually stabilise

the head with the spine in-line using the following stepwise approach:

Fit an appropriately sized semi-rigid collar unless contraindicated by:

a compromised airway

known spinal deformities, such as ankylosing spondylitis (in these cases keep

the spine in the person's current position).

Reassess the airway after applying the collar.

Place and secure the person on a scoop stretcher.

Secure the person with head blocks and tape, ideally in a vacuum mattress.

1.1.14 When carrying out full in-line spinal immobilisation in children, manually

stabilise the head with the spine in-line using the stepwise approach in

recommendation 1.1.13 and consider:

involving family members and carers if appropriate

keeping infants in their car seat if possible

using a scoop stretcher with blanket rolls, vacuum mattress, vacuum limb splints or

Kendrick extrication device.

ExtricationExtrication

1.1.15 When there is immediate threat to a person's life and rapid extrication is

needed, make all efforts to limit spinal movement without delaying treatment.

1.1.16 Consider asking a person to self-extricate if they are not physically trapped and

have none of the following:

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significant distracting injuries

abnormal neurological symptoms (paraesthesia or weakness or numbness)

spinal pain

high-risk factors for cervical spine injury as assessed by the Canadian C-spine rule.

1.1.17 Explain to a person who is self-extricating that if they develop any spinal pain,

numbness, tingling or weakness, they should stop moving and wait to be moved.

1.1.18 When a person has self-extricated:

ask them to lay supine on a stretcher positioned adjacent to the vehicle or incident

in the ambulance, use recommendations 1.1.1 to 1.1.13 to assess them for spinal injury

and manage their condition.

1.1.19 Do not transport people with suspected spinal injury on a longboard or any

other extrication device. A longboard should only be used as an extrication

device.

1.2 Pain management in pre-hospital and hospital settings

PPain assessmentain assessment

1.2.1 See the NICE guideline on patient experience in adult NHS services for advice

on assessing pain in adults.

1.2.2 Assess pain regularly in people with spinal injury using a pain assessment scale

suitable for the patient's age, developmental stage and cognitive function.

1.2.3 Continue to assess pain in hospital using the same pain assessment scale that

was used in the pre-hospital setting.

PPain reliefain relief

1.2.4 Offer medications to control pain in the acute phase after spinal injury.

1.2.5 For people with spinal injury use intravenous morphine as the first-line analgesic

and adjust the dose as needed to achieve adequate pain relief.

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1.2.6 If intravenous access has not been established, consider the intranasal[1] route

for atomised delivery of diamorphine or ketamine.

1.2.7 Consider ketamine in analgesic doses as a second-line agent.

1.3 Immediate destination after injury

1.3.1 Be aware that the optimal destination for patients with major trauma is usually

a major trauma centre. In some locations or circumstances intermediate care in

a trauma unit might be needed for urgent treatment, in line with agreed practice

within the regional trauma network.

Suspected spinal cord injurySuspected spinal cord injury

1.3.2 Transport people with suspected acute traumatic spinal cord injury (with or

without column injury), with full in-line spinal immobilisation, to a major trauma

centre irrespective of transfer time, unless the person needs an immediate

lifesaving intervention.

1.3.3 Ensure that time spent at the scene is limited to giving life-saving interventions.

1.3.4 Divert to the nearest trauma unit if a patient with suspected acute traumatic

spinal cord injury (with or without column injury), with full in-line spinal

immobilisation, needs an immediate life-saving intervention, such as rapid

sequence induction of anaesthesia and intubation, that cannot be delivered by

the pre-hospital teams.

1.3.5 Do not transport people with suspected acute traumatic spinal cord injury (with

or without column injury), with full in-line spinal immobilisation, directly to a

spinal cord injury centre from the scene of the incident.

Suspected spinal column injurySuspected spinal column injury

1.3.6 Transport adults with suspected spinal column injury without suspected acute

traumatic spinal cord injury, with full in-line spinal immobilisation, to the nearest

trauma unit, unless there are pre-hospital triage indications to transport them

directly to a major trauma centre.

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1.3.7 Transport children with suspected spinal column injury (with or without spinal

cord injury) to a major trauma centre.

1.4 Emergency department assessment and management

1.4.1 On arrival at the emergency department use a prioritising sequence for

assessing people with suspected trauma (see recommendation 1.1.1).

1.4.2 Protect the person's cervical spine as in recommendation 1.1.2 or maintain full

in-line spinal immobilisation.

1.4.3 Assess the person for spinal injury as in recommendation 1.1.3.

1.4.4 Carry out or maintain full in-line spinal immobilisation in the emergency

department if any of the factors in recommendation 1.1.3 are present or if this

assessment cannot be done.

Suspected cervical spine injurySuspected cervical spine injury

1.4.5 Assess the person with suspected cervical spine injury using the Canadian

C-spine rule (see recommendations 1.1.5 and 1.1.6).

Suspected thorSuspected thoracic or lumbosacracic or lumbosacral spine injuryal spine injury

1.4.6 Assess the person with suspected thoracic or lumbosacral spine injury using the

factors listed in recommendations 1.1.7 and 1.1.8.

When to carry out or maintain full in-line spinal immobilisation and request imagingWhen to carry out or maintain full in-line spinal immobilisation and request imaging

1.4.7 Carry out or maintain full in-line spinal immobilisation and request imaging if:

a high-risk factor for cervical spine injury is identified and indicated by the Canadian

C-spine rule oror

a low-risk factor for cervical spine injury is identified and indicated by the Canadian

C-spine rule and the person is unable to actively rotate their neck 45 degrees left and

right oror

indicated by one or more of the factors listed in recommendation 1.1.7.

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1.4.8 Do not carry out or maintain full in-line spinal immobilisation or request imaging

for people if:

they have low-risk factors for cervical spine injury as identified and indicated by the

Canadian C-spine rule, are pain free and are able to actively rotate their neck

45 degrees left and right

they do not have any of the factors listed in recommendation 1.1.7.

How to carry out full in-line spinal immobilisationHow to carry out full in-line spinal immobilisation

1.4.9 When carrying out or maintaining full in-line immobilisation refer to

recommendations 1.1.11 to 1.1.14.

1.5 Diagnostic imaging

1.5.1 Imaging for spinal injury should be performed urgently, and the images should

be interpreted immediately by a healthcare professional with training and skills

in this area.

Suspected spinal cord or cervical column injurySuspected spinal cord or cervical column injury

ChilChildrendren

1.5.2 Perform MRI for children (under 16s) if there is a strong suspicion of:

cervical spinal cord injury as indicated by the Canadian C-spine rule and by clinical

assessment oror

cervical spinal column injury as indicated by clinical assessment or abnormal

neurological signs or symptoms, or both.

1.5.3 Consider plain X-rays in children (under 16s) who do not fulfil the criteria for

MRI in recommendation 1.5.2 but clinical suspicion remains after repeated

clinical assessment.

1.5.4 Discuss the findings of the plain X-rays with a consultant radiologist and

perform further imaging if needed.

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1.5.5 For imaging in children (under 16s) with head injury and suspected cervical

spine injury, follow the recommendations in section 1.5 of the NICE guideline on

head injury.

AdultsAdults

1.5.6 Perform CT in adults (16 or over) if:

imaging for cervical spine injury is indicated by the Canadian C-spine rule (see

recommendation 1.4.7) oror

there is a strong suspicion of thoracic or lumbosacral spine injury associated with

abnormal neurological signs or symptoms.

1.5.7 If, after CT, there is a neurological abnormality which could be attributable to

spinal cord injury, perform MRI.

1.5.8 For imaging in adults (16 or over) with head injury and suspected cervical spine

injury, follow the recommendations in section 1.5 of the NICE guideline on head

injury.

Suspected thorSuspected thoracic or lumbosacracic or lumbosacral column injury only (al column injury only (children and adults)children and adults)

1.5.9 Perform an X-ray as the first-line investigation for people with suspected spinal

column injury without abnormal neurological signs or symptoms in the thoracic

or lumbosacral regions (T1–L3).

1.5.10 Perform CT if the X-ray is abnormal or there are clinical signs or symptoms of a

spinal column injury.

1.5.11 If a new spinal column fracture is confirmed, image the rest of the spinal column.

Whole-body CTWhole-body CT

1.5.12 Use whole-body CT (consisting of a vertex-to-toes scanogram followed by CT

from vertex to mid-thigh) in adults (16 or over) with blunt major trauma and

suspected multiple injuries. Patients should not be repositioned during

whole-body CT.

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1.5.13 Use clinical findings and the scanogram to direct CT of the limbs in adults (16 or

over) with limb trauma.

1.5.14 If a person with suspected spinal column injury has whole-body CT carry out

multiplanar reformatting to show all of the thoracic and lumbosacral regions

with sagittal and coronal reformats.

1.5.15 Do not routinely use whole-body CT to image children (under 16s). Use clinical

judgement to limit CT to the body areas where assessment is needed.

1.6 Communication with tertiary services

1.6.1 For people in a trauma unit who have a spinal cord injury, the trauma team

leader should immediately contact the specialist neurosurgical or spinal

surgeon on call in the trauma unit or nearest major trauma centre.

1.6.2 For people in a major trauma centre who have a spinal cord injury, the trauma

team leader should immediately contact the specialist neurosurgical or spinal

surgeon on call.

1.6.3 For people who have a spinal cord injury, the specialist neurosurgical or spinal

surgeon at the major trauma centre or trauma unit should contact the linked

spinal cord injury centre consultant within 4 hours of diagnosis to establish a

partnership of care.

1.6.4 All people who have a spinal cord injury should have a lifetime of personalised

care that is guided by a spinal cord injury centre.

1.7 Early management in the emergency department after traumatic spinalcord injury

1.7.1 All trauma networks should have network-wide written guidelines for the

immediate management of a person with spinal cord injury and these should be

agreed with the linked spinal cord injury centre.

1.7.2 The management of a spinal cord injury should be agreed between spinal

surgery and spinal cord injury specialists for each person.

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1.7.3 Do not use the following medications, aimed at providing neuroprotection and

prevention of secondary deterioration, in the acute stage after acute traumatic

spinal cord injury:

methylprednisolone

nimodipine

naloxone.

1.7.4 Do not use medications in the acute stage after traumatic spinal cord injury to

prevent neuropathic pain from developing in the chronic stage.

1.8 Information and support for patients, family members and carers

The NICE guideline on major trauma: service delivery contains recommendations for ambulance

and hospital trust boards, senior managers and commissioners on information and support for

patients, family members and carers.

ProProviding supportviding support

1.8.1 When communicating with patients, family members and carers:

manage expectations and avoid misinformation

answer questions and provide information honestly, within the limits of your

knowledge

do not speculate and avoid being overly optimistic or pessimistic when discussing

information on further investigations, diagnosis or prognosis

ask if there are any other questions.

1.8.2 The trauma team structure should include a clear point of contact for providing

information to the patients, their family members and carers.

1.8.3 Make eye contact and be in the patient's eye line to ensure that you are visible

when communicating with this person to avoid them moving their head.

1.8.4 If possible, ask the patient if they want someone (a family member, carer or

friend) with them.

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1.8.5 If the patient agrees, invite their family member, carer or friend into the

resuscitation room. Ensure that they are accompanied by a member of staff and

their presence does not affect assessment, diagnosis or treatment.

Support for children and vulnerSupport for children and vulnerable adultsable adults

1.8.6 Allocate a dedicated member of staff to contact the next of kin and provide

support for unaccompanied children and vulnerable adults.

1.8.7 Contact the mental health team as soon as possible for patients who have a

pre-existing psychological or psychiatric condition that might have contributed

to their injury, or a mental health problem that might affect their wellbeing or

care in hospital.

1.8.8 For a child or vulnerable adult with spinal injury, enable their family members

and carers to remain within eyesight if appropriate.

1.8.9 Work with family members and carers of children and vulnerable adults to

provide information and support. Take into account the age, developmental

stage and cognitive function of the child or vulnerable adult.

1.8.10 Include siblings of an injured child when offering support to family members and

carers.

ProProviding informationviding information

1.8.11 Explain to patients, family members and carers what is wrong, what is

happening and why it is happening. Provide:

information on known injuries

details of immediate investigations and treatment, and if possible include time

schedules

information about expected outcomes of treatment, including time to returning to

usual activities and the likelihood of permanent effects on quality of life, such as pain,

loss of function or psychological effects.

1.8.12 Provide information at each stage of management (including the results of

imaging) in face-to-face consultations.

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1.8.13 Document all key communications with patients, family members and carers

about the management plan.

PrProviding information about troviding information about transfer fransfer from an emergency departmentom an emergency department

1.8.14 For patients who are being transferred from an emergency department to

another centre, provide verbal and written information that includes:

the reason for the transfer

the location of the receiving centre and the patient's destination within the receiving

centre. Provide information on the linked spinal cord injury centre (in the case of cord

injury) or the unit the patient will be transferred to (in the case of column injury or

other injuries needing more immediate attention)

the name and contact details of the person who was responsible for the patient's care

at the receiving centre

the name and contact details of the person who was responsible for the patient's care

at the initial hospital.

1.9 Documentation in pre-hospital and hospital settings

The NICE guideline on major trauma: service delivery contains recommendations for ambulance

and hospital trust boards, senior managers and commissioners on documentation within trauma

networks.

Recording information in pre-hospital settingsRecording information in pre-hospital settings

1.9.1 Record the following in people with suspected spinal injury in pre-hospital

settings:

<C>ABCDE (catastrophic haemorrhage, airway with in-line spinal immobilisation,

breathing, circulation, disability [neurological], exposure and environment)

spinal pain

motor function, for example hand or foot weakness

sensory function, for example altered or absent sensation in the hands or feet

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priapism in an unconscious or exposed male.

1.9.2 If possible, record information on whether the assessments show that the

person's condition is improving or deteriorating.

1.9.3 Record pre-alert information using a structured system and include all of the

following:

the patient's age and sex

time of incident

mechanism of injury

injuries suspected

signs, including vital signs and Glasgow Coma Scale

treatment so far

estimated time of arrival at emergency department

special requirements

the ambulance call sign, name of the person taking the call and time of call.

Receiving information in hospital settingsReceiving information in hospital settings

1.9.4 A senior nurse or trauma team leader in the emergency department should

receive the pre-alert information, and determine the level of trauma team

response according to agreed and written local guidelines.

1.9.5 The trauma team leader should be easily identifiable to receive the handover

and the trauma team ready to receive the information.

1.9.6 The pre-hospital documentation, including the recorded pre-alert information,

should be quickly available to the trauma team and placed in the patient's

hospital notes.

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Recording information in hospital settingsRecording information in hospital settings

1.9.7 Record the items listed in recommendation 1.9.1 as a minimum, for the primary

survey.

1.9.8 Record the secondary survey results, including a detailed neurological

assessment and examination for any spinal pain or spinal tenderness.

1.9.9 If spinal cord injury is suspected in people aged over 4 years, complete an ASIA

chart (American Spinal Injury Association) as soon as possible in the emergency

department, and record:

vital capacity for people over 7 years

ability to cough.

1.9.10 One member of the trauma team should be designated to record all trauma

team findings and interventions as they occur (take 'contemporaneous notes').

1.9.11 The trauma team leader should be responsible for checking the information

recorded to ensure that it is complete.

Sharing information in hospital settingsSharing information in hospital settings

1.9.12 Follow a structured process when handing over care within the emergency

department (including shift changes) and to other departments. Ensure that the

handover is documented.

1.9.13 Ensure that all patient documentation, including images and reports, goes with

the patient when they are transferred to other departments or centres.

1.9.14 Produce a written summary, which gives the diagnosis, management plan and

expected outcome and:

is aimed at and sent to the patient's GP within 24 hours of admission

includes a summary written in plain English that is understandable by patients, family

members and carers

is readily available in the patient's records.

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1.10 Training and skills

These recommendations are for ambulance and hospital trust boards, medicalThese recommendations are for ambulance and hospital trust boards, medicaldirectors and senior managers within trdirectors and senior managers within trauma networks.auma networks.

1.10.1 Ensure that each healthcare professional within the major trauma service has

the training and skills to deliver, safely and effectively, the interventions they

are required to give, in line with this guideline and the NICE guidelines on non-

complex fractures, complex fractures and major trauma.

1.10.2 Enable each healthcare professional who delivers care to patients with trauma

to have up-to-date training in the interventions they are required to give.

1.10.3 Provide education and training courses for healthcare professionals who deliver

care to children with major trauma that include the following components:

safeguarding

taking into account the radiation risk of CT to children when discussing imaging for

them

the importance of the major trauma team, the roles of team members and the team

leader, and working effectively in a major trauma team

managing the distress that families and carers may experience and breaking bad news

the importance of clinical audit and case review.

[1] At the time of publication (February 2016), neither intranasal diamorphine nor intranasal

ketamine had a UK marketing authorisation for this indication. The prescriber should follow

relevant professional guidance, taking full responsibility for the decision. Informed consent should

be obtained and documented. See the General Medical Council's Prescribing guidance: prescribing

unlicensed medicines for further information.

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ConteContextxt

Spinal injury usually involves a fracture of the spinal column, which sometimes leads to spinal cord

injury. The main causes of spinal injury are road traffic collisions, falls, violent attacks, sporting

injuries and domestic incidents. Although spinal injury affects all ages, young and middle-aged men

and older women tend to be the populations at highest risk. Approximately 1000 people sustain a

new spinal cord injury each year in the UK. These injuries are associated with serious neurological

damage and can result in paraplegia, tetraplegia or death. Currently there are no 'cures' for spinal

cord injury and in the UK there are 40,000 people living with long-term disabilities as a result of

such injuries.

This guideline covers the assessment, imaging and early management of people (adults and

children) with spinal column or spinal cord injury secondary to a traumatic event. It includes the

following key clinical areas:

initial triage and management by pre-hospital care staff

acute stage clinical assessment and management

acute stage imaging

timing of referral and the criteria for acceptance by tertiary services

information and support needs of patients and their families and carers

documentation

training and skills.

The guideline does not cover spinal injury that is caused by a disease, rather than a traumatic event.

More information

You can also see this guideline in the NICE pathway on trauma.

To find out what NICE has said on topics related to this guideline, see our web page on injuries,

accidents and wounds.

See also the guideline committee's discussion and the evidence reviews (in the full guideline),

and information about how the guideline was developed, including details of the committee.

Spinal injury: assessment and initial management (NG41)

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Recommendations for researchRecommendations for research

The guideline committee has made the following recommendations for research.

1 Neuropathic pain relief

Does early treatment with a centrally acting analgesic (for example pregabalin) reduce the

frequency or severity of neuropathic pain in people with spinal cord injury?

WhWhy this is importanty this is important

Neuropathic pain occurs in 40% of people with spinal cord injury. It can be severe and disabling, and

in people with spinal cord injury it can lead to further impairment of function. Having neuropathic

pain can also result in increased care needs and costs of care, and make it difficult to find

employment. It also increases the risk of significant depressive illness and suicide. Research is

needed to address whether early treatment of spinal cord injury with a centrally acting analgesic

such as pregabalin might reduce the frequency or severity of neuropathic pain.

2 Cervical spine dislocation

What is the clinical and cost effectiveness of emergency reduction of cervical spine dislocations

following acute traumatic cervical spine injury?

WhWhy this is importanty this is important

Half of all traumatic spinal cord injuries involve the cervical spinal cord, and a large proportion of

these are caused by cervical spine dislocation. Cervical spinal cord injury caused by traumatic

cervical spine dislocation produces permanent disability. The greater the permanent neurological

impairment the greater the disability. A high level of disability is associated with less independence,

fewer opportunities for a full life, reduced prospects for employment and a shorter life expectancy.

Any intervention that improves the neurological outcome in this group of people will improve all of

these adverse outcomes.

3 Thoracic and lumbosacral assessment tool

After injury, what is the best method of clinical assessment to determine who needs imaging of the

thoracic and lumbar spine to exclude injury to the spinal column or cord, and who is safe to

discharge without risk of missing significant injury?

Spinal injury: assessment and initial management (NG41)

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WhWhy this is importanty this is important

Injuries to the thoracic and lumbar spine are associated with significant morbidity and can be

associated with relatively minor mechanisms of injury. This is a particular problem in older people

where such injuries can have a significant impact on their mobility, functional status and level of

independence.

ISBN: 978-1-4731-1684-9

Spinal injury: assessment and initial management (NG41)

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